Jameson Witty, 18, of Tujunga, posted these images on Instagram that show him holding the Porshe part he allegedly stole off a tow truck containing what was left of the car that actor Paul Walker and friend Roger Rodas were in when they died on Nov. 30. Witty and Anthony Janow, 25, have been arrested in connection with the incident.

In this April 29, 2011 file photo, actor Paul Walker poses during the photo call of the movie "Fast and Furious 5," in Rome. Walker and his friend Roger Rodas died in a one-car crash on Nov. 30, 2013, in Valencia. (Andrew Medichini, AP Photo)

A second man was arrested Monday in connection with the theft of a piece of the Porsche actor Paul Walker and Roger Rodas were in when they died.

Anthony Janow, 25, turned himself in to authorities at Los Angeles County Superior Court’s San Fernando courthouse around 10 a.m., and was released about an hour later, according to sheriff’s department records.

Janow and Jameson Witty, 18, have each been charged with one felony count of grand theft of personal property and two misdemeanor counts of destroying evidence and resisting, obstructing and delaying a peace officer. Witty was arrested last week and has since been released in lieu of $20,000 bail.

Investigators allege the pair followed the tow truck taking the 2005 Porsche Carrera to a sheriff’s impound yard following the fiery crash in Valencia on Nov. 30.

While it was stopped at a red light, the pair allegedly took a T-top panel of the car’s roof. A photo of the car piece was later posted on an Instagram account in Witty’s name. The photo has since been removed, and a photo of a statement has replaced it.

“I wanted to say, my intentions for the piece I took off the tow truck were to make a memorial out of it. Paul was a childhood idol to me and many. At the time I was not thinking about the consequences it could have. I never wanted it to be like this. I wasn’t going to sell the piece to make a profit. Noveody in this world is perfect, we all make mistakes. Some bigger than others,” he wrote in the post. “My deepest apologies go to Paul’s family. And I’m going to say with confidence that I messed up big time but continue on with life as should you all.”

According to the district attorney’s office, Witty and Janow were told prior to the theft by a sheriff’s deputy that they could not take any part of the car.

If convicted, the men each face a maximum sentence of four years and six months in county jail.